scott salvatori said:i made the satelite radio switch in 2002, right when we headed off on a big road trip for a week. yep, the best part of the trip was the great country music programming on several channels, which was way beyond the centralized, chart controlled, speeded up and artificially sound modified product your all force fed here on the major market FM. dont like country? you will also find real album rock, and deep triple A, as well on "DEEP TRACKS", and "THE LOFT".
I would think it would occur at Midnight or 6 AM tomorrow. If I had a recorder, I would start rolling at 9 just to make sure.bobdavcav said:The flip is supposed to happen tonight or early tomorrow morning, right? I will be preparing my recording equipment before bed tonight.
bobdavcav said:These days I have been getting to bed about 10, so that's probably when I will start recording and will probably shut it off about 8 tomorrow morning, that's when I have to get up for school.
345palm said:It is a CBS O&O, running CBS product. They will have a lot of patience because the station will not be expensive to operate. Plus, progressive talk on 1090 was not exactly dominating the market.
This station isn't going to do anything. At least with progressive talk, they were doing something you couldn't find elsewhere on the dial.toonces2u said:345palm said:It is a CBS O&O, running CBS product. They will have a lot of patience because the station will not be expensive to operate. Plus, progressive talk on 1090 was not exactly dominating the market.
So what? It was still better than having another friggin sports station in the market!
Goldilocks94941 said:< At least with progressive talk, they were doing something you couldn't find elsewhere on the dial. >
I'm afraid, as we have been learning in recent months from several frequent "insider" posters on this board, that airing "anything that you can't find elsewhere on the dial" is now corporate commercial radio code for "format change."
I still don't see how a handful of corporations can hold the licenses for all of the good signals in a market, yet expect each station to show up as a "top 3" in the ratings. And living and dying by age and gender is a really narrow way to sell radio. Some of these stations by default simply have to be specialty programming of one sort or another reaching niche audiences and special interests. (And I'm not talking about time-brokered crap.)
But these guys who have convinced Congress to deregulate in their favor for the past few decades demonstrate neither the patience, nor the talent, to consistently program and promote any more than, say, five basic radio formats any more. I do think for being a station with a tiny staff but a big, albeit intereference-prone signal, 1090 was actually running a very good line up, which enabled them to have live hosts from 3am to 6pm daily. And bringing Randi Rhodes back at 6pm (after they replaced her a couple of years ago) always made my drive home from work fun, since I always learned something interesting from her astute perspectives on the American political scene. She's able to articulate what I'm suspecting about AMerican politics, and throw some new, interesting angles on it.
Anyone with smart phone recommendations for switching my "radio" listening to streaming, apps, and podcasts?
Best post I've read all year! (I know, I know, smartmouths, we're only into the 2nd day of the yearGoldilocks94941 said:< At least with progressive talk, they were doing something you couldn't find elsewhere on the dial. >
I'm afraid, as we have been learning in recent months from several frequent "insider" posters on this board, that airing "anything that you can't find elsewhere on the dial" is now corporate commercial radio code for "format change."
I still don't see how a handful of corporations can hold the licenses for all of the good signals in a market, yet expect each station to show up as a "top 3" in the ratings. And living and dying by age and gender is a really narrow way to sell radio. Some of these stations by default simply have to be specialty programming of one sort or another reaching niche audiences and special interests. (And I'm not talking about time-brokered crap.)
But these guys who have convinced Congress to deregulate in their favor for the past few decades demonstrate neither the patience, nor the talent, to consistently program and promote any more than, say, five basic radio formats any more. I do think for being a station with a tiny staff but a big, albeit intereference-prone signal, 1090 was actually running a very good line up, which enabled them to have live hosts from 3am to 6pm daily. And bringing Randi Rhodes back at 6pm (after they replaced her a couple of years ago) always made my drive home from work fun, since I always learned something interesting from her astute perspectives on the American political scene. She's able to articulate what I'm suspecting about AMerican politics, and throw some new, interesting angles on it.
Anyone with smart phone recommendations for switching my "radio" listening to streaming, apps, and podcasts?